This glossary of essential paint and color terms will help you, your colleagues and your clients stay on the same page when discussing projects.
This excerpt focuses on technique terms.
Bleaching. The use of oxatic acid or other agents to lighten or restore discolored or stained wood to its original color.
Bleeding. The diffusion of color matter from underlying surfaces through a coating, causing color change.
Dull Rubbed Effect. A common furniture finish in which gloss is rubbed to a mar-free, dull finish with sandpaper, pumice or steel wool.
Feathering. Blending the edges of a finished area by lifting the brush at the end of the stroke so that the edge becomes indefinite. Also, sanding a dry film and tapering the edge smooth with the underlying substrate.
Graining. The process of applying a wood grain pattern onto a surface that does not possess natural grain textures.
Marbling. A special-effect glazing technique that makes a substrate look like marble.
Metalizing. A process of coating a surface with a layer of metal by spraying, vacuum deposition, dipping, plasma jet, cementation, or other methods.
Yellowing. Development of a yellow color upon aging or curing.
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